首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
We screened phage libraries using sera from noninfected individuals and patients infected by hepatitis C virus (HCV). By applying different selection and maturation strategies, we identified a wide collection of efficient phage-borne ligands for HCV-specific antibodies. The selected ligands retained their antigenic properties when expressed as multimeric synthetic peptides. Peptides that mimic several immunodominant epitopes of the virus were used to develop a novel type of diagnostic assay which efficiently detects antibodies to HCV in serum. This type of analysis provides a conclusive diagnosis for many patients identified as indeterminate according to presently available serological assays.  相似文献   

2.
One bead one compound (OBOC) libraries can be screened against serum samples to identify ligands to antibodies in this mixture. In this protocol, hit beads are identified by staining with a fluorescent labeled secondary antibody. When screens are conducted against two different sets of serum, antibodies, and ligands to them, can be discovered that distinguish the two populations. The application of DNA-encoding technology to OBOC libraries has allowed the use of 10?µm beads for library preparation and screening, which pass through a standard flow cytometer, allowing the fluorescent hit beads to be separated from beads displaying non-ligands easily. An important issue in using this approach for the discovery of antibody biomarkers is its analytical sensitivity. In other words, how abundant must an IgG be to allow it to be pulled out of serum in an unbiased screen using a flow cytometer? We report here a model study in which monoclonal antibodies with known ligands of varying affinities are doped into serum. We find that for antibody ligands typical of what one isolates from an unbiased combinatorial library, the target antibody must be present at 10–50?nM. True antigens, which bind with significantly higher affinity, can detect much less abundant serum antibodies.  相似文献   

3.
Improving antibody affinity by mimicking somatic hypermutation in vitro.   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
In vivo affinity maturation of antibodies involves mutation of hot spots in the DNA encoding the variable regions. We have used this information to develop a strategy to improve antibody affinity in vitro using phage display technology. In our experiment with the antimesothelin scFv, SS(scFv), we identified DNA sequences in the variable regions that are naturally prone to hypermutations, selected a few hot spots encoding nonconserved amino acids, and introduced random mutations to make libraries with a size requirement between 10(3) and 10(4) independent clones. Panning of the hot spot libraries yielded several mutants with a 15- to 55-fold increase in affinity compared with a single clone with a fourfold increased affinity from a library in which mutagenesis was done outside the hot spots. The strategy should be generally applicable for the rapid isolation of higher-affinity mutants of Fvs, Fabs, and other recombinant antibodies from antibody phage libraries that are small in size.  相似文献   

4.
Random peptide libraries displayed on the surface of filamentous bacteriophage are widely used as tools for the discovery of ligands for biologically relevant macromolecules, including antibodies, enzymes, and cell surface receptors. Phage display results in linkage of an affinity-selectable function (the displayed peptide) to the DNA encoding that function, allowing selection of individual binding clones by iterative cycles of in vitro panning and in vivo amplification. Critical to the success of a panning experiment is the complexity of the library: the greater the diversity of clones within the library, the more likely the library contains sequences that will bind a given target with useful affinity. A method for construction of high-complexity (> or = 10(9) independent clones) random peptide libraries is presented. The key steps are highly efficient binary ligation under conditions where the vector is relatively dilute, with only a modest molar excess of insert, followed by efficient electrotransformation into Escherichia coli. Library design strategies and a protocol for rapid sequence characterization are also presented.  相似文献   

5.
《MABS-AUSTIN》2013,5(2):294-302
pH-dependent antibodies are engineered to release their target at a slightly acidic pH, a property making them suitable for clinical as well as biotechnological applications. Such antibodies were previously obtained by histidine scanning of pre-existing antibodies, a labor-intensive strategy resulting in antibodies that displayed residual binding to their target at pH 6.0. We report here the de novo isolation of pH-dependent antibodies selected by phage display from libraries enriched in histidines. Strongly pH-dependent clones with various affinity profiles against CXCL10 were isolated by this method. Our best candidate has nanomolar affinity for CXCL10 at pH 7.2, but no residual binding was detected at pH 6.0. We therefore propose that this new process is an efficient strategy to generate pH-dependent antibodies.  相似文献   

6.
pH-dependent antibodies are engineered to release their target at a slightly acidic pH, a property making them suitable for clinical as well as biotechnological applications. Such antibodies were previously obtained by histidine scanning of pre-existing antibodies, a labor-intensive strategy resulting in antibodies that displayed residual binding to their target at pH 6.0. We report here the de novo isolation of pH-dependent antibodies selected by phage display from libraries enriched in histidines. Strongly pH-dependent clones with various affinity profiles against CXCL10 were isolated by this method. Our best candidate has nanomolar affinity for CXCL10 at pH 7.2, but no residual binding was detected at pH 6.0. We therefore propose that this new process is an efficient strategy to generate pH-dependent antibodies.  相似文献   

7.
The recent development of catalytic antibodies and the introduction of new techniques to generate huge libraries of random mutants of existing enzymes have created the need for powerful tools for finding in large populations of cells those producing the catalytically most active proteins. Several approaches have been developed and used to reach this goal. The screening techniques aim at easily detecting the clones producing active enzymes or abzymes; the selection techniques are designed to extract these clones from mixtures. These techniques have been applied both in vivo and in vitro. This review describes the advantages and limitations of the various methods in terms of ease of use, sensitivity, and convenience for handling large libraries. Examples are analyzed and tentative rules proposed. These techniques prove to be quite powerful to study the relationship between structure and function and to alter the properties of enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
Mucin-1 has proven to be a suitable target for antibody-based diagnosis and therapy of certain tumours, but no appropriate human antibody or antibody fragment displaying slow dissociation rate kinetics against this target is available. Since a rapid dissociation character prevents an antibody fragment from remaining at the site of the antigen, this fact may prevent the successful application of a human mucin-1 specific antibody in diagnosis and therapy. We have now used iterative antibody libraries to evolve a human antibody fragment originally obtained from a na?ve antibody library. A strategy was devised whereby molecular variants displaying slow dissociation kinetics against the repetitive mucin-1 tumour-associated antigen can be selected in vitro. The evolved clones, that allowed for a reduced dissociation from the tumour antigen, carried substitutions in the outer parts of the binding site. This demonstrated the ability of this in vitro evolution technique to mimic the process whereby antibodies evolve in vivo. We have thus devised a strategy through which molecular variants displaying slow dissociation from a repetitive target like the mucin-1 tumour-associated antigen can be obtained in vitro. These or related molecules obtained by this approach will serve as a starting point for the development of fully human antibodies for use in mucin-1 specific tumour therapy of diagnosis.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Here, we describe the application of a RecA-based cloning technology to generate full-length cDNA libraries enriched for genes that are differentially expressed between tumor and normal tissue samples. First, we show that the RecA-based method can be used to enrich cDNA libraries for several target genes in a single reaction. Then, we demonstrate that this method can be extended to enrich a cDNA library for many full-length cDNA clones using fragments derived from a subtracted cDNA population. The results of these studies show that this RecA-mediated cloning technology can be used to convert subtracted cDNAs or a mixture of several cDNA fragments corresponding to differentially expressed genes into a full-length library in a single reaction. This procedure yields a population of expression-ready clones that can be used for further high-throughput functional screening.  相似文献   

11.
We describe a general method for the preparation of λZAP II cDNA libraries from very small amounts (<50 mg) of plant tissue. We have achieved this by combining an efficient method for RNA extraction with a modified PCR protocol for the synthesis and amplification of cDNA. Using this protocol we have found it possible to generate cDNA libraries containing more than 106 clones from as little as 1 μg of total RNA.  相似文献   

12.
The demand for antibodies that fulfill the needs of both basic and clinical research applications is high and will dramatically increase in the future. However, it is apparent that traditional monoclonal technologies are not alone up to this task. This has led to the development of alternate methods to satisfy the demand for high quality and renewable affinity reagents to all accessible elements of the proteome. Toward this end, high throughput methods for conducting selections from phage-displayed synthetic antibody libraries have been devised for applications involving diverse antigens and optimized for rapid throughput and success. Herein, a protocol is described in detail that illustrates with video demonstration the parallel selection of Fab-phage clones from high diversity libraries against hundreds of targets using either a manual 96 channel liquid handler or automated robotics system. Using this protocol, a single user can generate hundreds of antigens, select antibodies to them in parallel and validate antibody binding within 6-8 weeks. Highlighted are: i) a viable antigen format, ii) pre-selection antigen characterization, iii) critical steps that influence the selection of specific and high affinity clones, and iv) ways of monitoring selection effectiveness and early stage antibody clone characterization. With this approach, we have obtained synthetic antibody fragments (Fabs) to many target classes including single-pass membrane receptors, secreted protein hormones, and multi-domain intracellular proteins. These fragments are readily converted to full-length antibodies and have been validated to exhibit high affinity and specificity. Further, they have been demonstrated to be functional in a variety of standard immunoassays including Western blotting, ELISA, cellular immunofluorescence, immunoprecipitation and related assays. This methodology will accelerate antibody discovery and ultimately bring us closer to realizing the goal of generating renewable, high quality antibodies to the proteome.  相似文献   

13.
Moon SA  Ki MK  Lee S  Hong ML  Kim M  Kim S  Chung J  Rhee SG  Shim H 《Molecules and cells》2011,31(6):509-513
Target-specific antibodies can be rapidly enriched and identified from an antibody library using phage display. Large, naïve antibody libraries derived from synthetic or unimmunized sources can yield antibodies against virtually any antigen, whereas libraries from immunized sources tend to be smaller and are used exclusively against the antigen of immunization. In this study, 25 scFv libraries made from the spleens of immunized rabbits, each with a size ranging from 108 to higher than 109, were combined into a single large library with > 1010 individual clones. Panning of this combined library yielded target-specific rabbit scFv clones against many non-immunizing antigens, including proteins, peptides, and a small molecule. Notably, specific scFv clones against a rabbit self-antigen (rabbit serum albumin) and a phosphorylated protein (epidermal growth factor receptor pTyr1173) could be isolated from the library. These results suggest that the immune library contained a significant number of unimmunized clones and that a sufficiently large immune library can be utilized similarly to a naïe library, i.e., against various non-immunizing antigens to yield specific antibodies.  相似文献   

14.
We have recently described an efficient method to study the human humoral immune response in vitro and to generate isotype-switched, antigen-specific human B cells, which has allowed us to produce high-affinity IgG antibodies against different peptides. In an attempt to study the in vitro immune response against self-antigens, such as tumour-associated antigens, this protocol was used to immunise resting human peripheral blood B cells with a peptide epitope from the human-adenocarcinoma-associated antigen, MUC1. After the two-step in vitro immunisation, the secondary immunised cultures were tested for MUC-1-specific antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Phage molecular libraries were subsequently constructed, using the variable parts of Ig genes derived from cells taken from ELISA-positive wells. The libraries were selected on the MUC1 core peptide. Antigen-specific Fab fragments, specific for the self antigen MUC1, were found in the library of secondary immunised IgG+ B cells and these antibodies were evaluated by BIAcore analysis. The specific Fab fragments exhibited an unusually rapid dissociation rate constant and the overall response frequency was lower, as compared to other antibodies generated by this protocol, which might be explained by the repetitive nature of the core peptide used for immunisation. Received: 30 June 1998 / Accepted: 24 September 1998  相似文献   

15.
Libraries constructed in bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) vectors have become the choice for clone sets in high throughput genomic sequencing projects primarily because of their high stability. BAC libraries have been proposed as a source for minimally over-lapping clones for sequencing large genomic regions, and the use of BAC end sequences (i.e. sequences adjoining the insert sites) has been proposed as a primary means for selecting minimally overlapping clones for sequencing large genomic regions. For this strategy to be effective, high throughput methods for BAC end sequencing of all the clones in deep coverage BAC libraries needed to be developed. Here we describe a low cost, efficient, 96 well procedure for BAC end sequencing. These methods allow us to generate BAC end sequences from human and Arabidoposis libraries with an average read length of >450 bases and with a single pass sequencing average accuracy of >98%. Application of BAC end sequences in genomic sequen-cing is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Recent studies have demonstrated the utility of synthetic combinatorial libraries for the rapid identification of peptide ligands that stimulate clonotypic populations of T cells. Here we screen a decapeptide combinatorial library arranged in a positional scanning format with two different clonotypic populations of CD4+ T cells to identify peptide epitopes that stimulate proliferative responses by these T cells in vitro. An extensive collection of mimic peptide sequences was synthesized and used to explore the fine specificity of TCR/peptide/MHC interactions. We also demonstrate that many of these deduced ligands are not only effective immunogens in vivo, but are capable of inducing T cell responses to the original native ligands used to generate the clones. These results have significant implications for considerations of T cell specificity and the design of peptide vaccines for infectious disease and cancer using clinically relevant T cell clones of unknown specificity.  相似文献   

17.
Detection of antibodies in serum has many important applications. Our goal was to develop a facile general experimental approach for identifying antibody-specific peptide ligands that could be used as the reagents for antibody detection. Our emphasis was on an approach that would allow identification of peptide ligands for antibodies in serum without the need to isolate the target antibody or to know the identity of its antigen. We combined ribosome display (RD) with the analysis of peptide libraries by next generation sequencing (NGS) of their coding RNA to facilitate identification of antibody-specific peptide ligands from random sequence peptide library. We first demonstrated, using purified antibodies, that with our approach-specific peptide ligands for antibodies with simple linear epitopes, as well as peptide mimotopes for antibodies recognizing complex epitopes, were readily identified. Inclusion of NGS analysis reduced the number of RD selection rounds that were required to identify specific ligands and facilitated discrimination between specific and spurious nonspecific sequences. We then used a model of human serum spiked with a known target antibody to develop NGS-based analysis that allowed identification of specific ligands for a target antibody in the context of an overwhelming amount of unrelated immunoglobins present in serum.  相似文献   

18.
The cytoplasmic domain of the Fc gamma receptor IIB (FcgammaRIIB) can be successfully displayed on the surface of filamentous phage, and after phosphorylation in vitro, can interact specifically with the SH2 domains of SHP-2, a cytoplasmic tyrosine phosphatase. When full-length FcgammaRIIB is expressed on phage, however, this interaction is greatly compromised, illustrating that characteristics of the full-length sequence are not well tolerated by the phage display system. Many associations in cell physiology are driven by similar interactions involving small modular binding domains or ligands, and so a fragmented cDNA library will facilitate display of such domains free of sequences which compromise their expression. A fragmented leukocyte cDNA display library of 10(8) clones was constructed. This library was phosphorylated in vitro with fyn kinase and was selected against the tandem SH2 domains of SHP-2 in the search for additional ligands. A depletion strategy to remove non-specific clones was employed, using SHP-2 Sepharose, prior to in vitro phosphorylation and selection. This permitted the emergence of clones encoding the cytoplasmic domain of PECAM-1, another natural ligand for SHP-2. The importance of dual phosphorylation of tyrosine residues at positions 663 and 686 was confirmed in competition ELISA experiments using phosphorylated phage and synthetic peptides. Thus, phage display of fragmented cDNA libraries permits the identification and characterisation of phosphorylated ligands of modular binding domains based on their functional interaction.  相似文献   

19.
Biotechnological applications of phage and cell display   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
In recent years, the use of surface-display vectors for displaying polypeptides on the surface of bacteriophage and bacteria, combined with in vitro selection technologies, has transformed the way in which we generate and manipulate ligands, such as enzymes, antibodies and peptides. Phage display is based on expressing recombinant proteins or peptides fused to a phage coat protein. Bacterial display is based on expressing recombinant proteins fused to sorting signals that direct their incorporation on the cell surface. In both systems, the genetic information encoding for the displayed molecule is physically linked to its product via the displaying particle. Using these two complementary technologies, we are now able to design repertoires of ligands from scratch and use the power of affinity selection to select those ligands having the desired (biological) properties from a large excess of irrelevant ones. With phage display, tailor-made proteins (fused peptides, antibodies, enzymes, DNA-binding proteins) may be synthesized and selected to acquire the desired catalytic properties or affinity of binding and specificity for in vitro and in vivo diagnosis, for immunotherapy of human disease or for biocatalysis. Bacterial surface display has found a range of applications in the expression of various antigenic determinants, heterologous enzymes, single-chain antibodies, and combinatorial peptide libraries. This review explains the basis of phage and bacterial surface display and discusses the contributions made by these two leading technologies to biotechnological applications. This review focuses mainly on three areas where phage and cell display have had the greatest impact, namely, antibody engineering, enzyme technology and vaccine development.  相似文献   

20.
In this report, we describe a simple, rapid, efficient and inexpensive strategy for sequencing inserted DNAs from clones of cDNA or gDNA libraries. This strategy uses PCR products directly amplified from transformed bacterial colonies, with universal primers within the vector. The method can be applied for sequencing cDNA or gDNA libraries with up to 4 ∼ 5 kb insert sizes, without overnight liquid culture or plasmid DNA preparation steps. We successfully used this method to analyze clones from full-length, enriched cDNA libraries. Although simple, following this strategy will significantly help researchers to avoid unnecessary steps in the analysis of a cDNA library.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号